Citing the New York Finders Keepers law, a man from the crypto community sues for 3.8 million dormant Bitcoin, including a Mentougou theft address.

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Golden Finance reports, according to market sources: A man claiming to be "Noah Doi" took a USB drive containing information on 39,069 dormant Bitcoin wallets to the New York City Police Department to register it as lost property and received a receipt of acceptance.
Now he has filed a lawsuit in New York, requesting the court to determine himself as the legal owner of these assets.
The involved Bitcoin amounts to approximately 3.8 million coins, with a total value of about $286 billion.
The man claims he independently developed an algorithm to screen these wallets and cites the relevant property found law enacted in New York in 1958 to assert ownership of the assets.
The first wallet address on the list is the address of the hacker involved in the 2011 Mt. Gox exchange theft.
It contains about 80k stolen Bitcoins from that year, with no transfer records in 15 years, now valued at approximately $6 billion, and it is also a address that long-term on-chain analysts worldwide have been closely monitoring.
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